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Review Articles

Drones, spies, terrorists, and second-class citizenship in Pakistan

Pages 205-235 | Received 11 Nov 2013, Accepted 12 Nov 2013, Published online: 28 May 2014

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (4)

Alamgir Khan & Christian Kaunert. (2023) US drone strikes, securitization processes and practices: A case study of Pakistan. Critical Studies on Terrorism 16:2, pages 287-304.
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Talat Farooq, Scott Lucas & Stefan Wolff. (2020) Predators and Peace: Explaining the Failure of the Pakistani Conflict Settlement Process in 2013-4. Civil Wars 22:1, pages 26-63.
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Christine Fair & Ali Hamza. (2016) From elite consumption to popular opinion: framing of the US drone program in Pakistani newspapers. Small Wars & Insurgencies 27:4, pages 578-607.
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Articles from other publishers (6)

Syed Irfan Ashraf & Muhammad Farooq. (2022) Pashto poetry and drones: the necromaniac mutations of tapey. Liberal Arts and Social Sciences International Journal (LASSIJ) 6:1, pages 17-30.
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Asfandyar Mir & Dylan Moore. (2019) Drones, Surveillance, and Violence: Theory and Evidence from a US Drone Program. International Studies Quarterly.
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Ummad Mazhar. (2016) Do remotely piloted aerial vehicles make terrorism more costly for terrorists?. International Journal of Conflict Management 27:4, pages 470-486.
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Patrick B. Johnston & Anoop K. Sarbahi. (2016) The Impact of US Drone Strikes on Terrorism in Pakistan. International Studies Quarterly 60:2, pages 203-219.
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C. Christine Fair & Ali Hamza. (2015) News Framing of the US Drone Program in Pakistani Newspapers: From Elite Discourse to Popular Opinion. SSRN Electronic Journal.
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Gregory S. McNeal. (2011) The U.S. Practice of Collateral Damage Estimation and Mitigation. SSRN Electronic Journal.
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